"I found out in the past week there is some archaic law that says if someone sets up residence in your home, it doesn't matter how they get in there, they have rights until we evict them,” Everman said.

Tamera Pritchett is living in the East Cobb home with her fiancé and two kids.

She said the family found it listed for rent on Craigslist. They signed a lease by fax, paid their rent via money order, never saw the ad poster and only learned there was a problem when Everman called the police, Pritchett said.

The next day, she went to the courthouse where she says deputies told her she could stay.

"And they told us until these people come and forcibly evict us, they can't force us out on our rights," Pritchett said.

Pritchett said the family is looking for another place to move but admitted that for now, they're staying.

"We're not just trying to stay in your home and hold you up on your sale. But at the same time, we just spent $3,000; that's not something we can just pull out and immediately move somewhere else, you know,” Pritchett said.

Everman is mad that she may lose the pending sale on her house and said her social media posts on her situation have generated anger.

"Outrage. Everybody doesn't understand why someone who has no legal right to be in my home can stay in my home, and I'm the one who has to evict them,” Everman said.

A lawyer who handles these cases told WSB-TV that in real estate, possession really is nine-tenths of the law and the homeowner will have to go through the painful eviction process, which could take four to six weeks.

According to CNN, the 2,500-square-foot New York Tudor has a new owner just three months after Michael Davis bought the property in Queens' Jamaica Estates neighborhood for $1.4 million. Last week, an unnamed bidder reportedly shelled out $2.14 million for the home where Trump lived until he was about 4.

For more information, contact Listing Agent Ann Gluck of Compass at 626-616-2310 or ann.gluck@compass.com.

"Um, I met somebody in Rome. Uh, he's an American -- He's from LA, actually! And his name's Brian McKenzie, and he's just this wonderful, wonderful, amazing man. And well, we started seeing each other -- a lot. And we fell in love."

The scene in which Annie Banks (Kimberly Williams-Paisley) tells her father, George, (Steve Martin) that she's getting married in "Father of the Bride" is nothing short of iconic.

And the house featured in the 1991 film just sold -- and at a steep price.

According to TopTenRealEstateDeals.com, Trump and his ex-wife, Ivana, bought the 5.8-acre property in 1982 for $4 million. Ivana, who received the estate in their 1991 divorce, sold it for $15 million in 1998.

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The nearly 20,000-square-foot home and guest house have eight bedrooms, 13 bathrooms, a double grand staircase, a home theater and three staff apartments. The grounds also feature a putting green, tennis courts and a pool.

<iframe src="//storify.com/cmgnationalnews/donald-trump-s-former-starter-mansion-just-had-a-y/embed?header=none&amp;border=false" width="100%" height="750" frameborder="no" allowtransparency="true"></iframe><script src="//storify.com/cmgnationalnews/donald-trump-s-former-starter-mansion-just-had-a-y.js?header=none&amp;border=false"></script>[View the story "Donald Trump's former 'starter mansion' just had a 'yuge' drop in its asking price" on Storify]